Los Angeles/Ottawa - Newsaktuell - 17 April 2025 - From
dissatisfaction with the Trudeau government to dissatisfaction with
Trump's policies — compounded by general anxiety around tariffs, the
economy and a deteriorating relationship with the U.S. — navigating an
economic downturn should be an immediate priority for Canada as it heads
into a federal election, a new report recommends.
In the long-term, however, it says Canada will need greater economic diversification and regional representation.
"Although it is wealthy by global standards, Canada's economy faces
key vulnerabilities such as excessive reliance on extractive industries,
shortages of critical goods like housing and heavy dependence on
exports to the U.S.," states a
Canada BGI Report on the country's governance performance, released a little more than ten days before the April 28 federal election.
The report, based on the
Berggruen Governance Index (BGI),
was conducted by researchers from the Los Angeles-based Berggruen
Institute think tank, the Luskin School of Public Affairs at the
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) and the Hertie School, a
German university.
Currently, Canada ranks only 48
th on the Economic
Complexity Index. "Given its wealth, this is a disproportionately low
figure and increasing it should be a top priority," said the report.
The Berggruen Governance Index (BGI) Project analyzes the relationship
between democratic accountability, state capacity and the provision of
public goods to develop a deeper understanding of how governments can
create a more resilient future for their people.
While Canada scores highly on most measures of the BGI, the report
found that Canada's performance "has been uneven over the last decade"
and for many years has failed to address systemic problems.
These problems, however, have been overshadowed by U.S. President Donald Trump.
Until recently, analysts predicted a landslide victory for the
Conservatives under Pierre Poilievre, since the Liberals, under former
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, had become deeply unpopular over numerous
policy decisions, including immigration.
But the Liberals have "experienced one of the most dramatic electoral
turnarounds in recent political history," according to the Canada BGI
Report, attributing the ascension of Trump to the U.S. presidency in
January 2025 to this reversal of fortunes.
This reversal also coincided with the resignation of Trudeau and the
selection of former Bank of Canada and Bank of England Governor Mark
Carney as the new Liberal leader.
"Repeated threats of tariffs and even territorial annexation provoked
outrage among Canadians and ignited a surge in patriotic sentiment, to
which Poilievre's defeatist 'Canada is broken' rhetoric was particularly
ill-suited," the researchers wrote.
Carney has rallied Canadians around national unity — and managed to
solidify a poll swing back to the Liberals. What seemed like an
inevitable win for the Conservatives just a few months ago has become a
close race to the finish line.
While the Canada BGI Report found that Carney's vision of "One
Canadian Economy" appears to be a politically successful response to the
crises Canada faces from the U.S., in the long-run Canada will need to
contend with "persistent economic tensions" and "overcome governance
challenges that predate both Trump and Trudeau", the report said.
The BGI scores for state capacity and democratic accountability "trail
those of many Western European peers," according to the report, with
institutional accountability falling by seven points from 2000 to 2021.
This indicates disillusionment with Canada's institutions; researchers
found that public trust in government steadily declined throughout the
2010s. "Coupled with eroding faith in democratic institutions and
lingering regional tensions, the previous unpopularity of Trudeau's
Liberals appears to reflect systemic issues rather than an anomaly,"
according to the Canada BGI Report.
A major flashpoint for Canadians is immigration. Canada has long been a
supporter of greater immigration but, by 2024, public sentiment had
shifted — helping to propel the Conservatives to the top of the polls.
Canada's international migration surged 15-fold under Trudeau — with the
aim of meeting the country's current labour shortage — but Ottawa
started coming under fire for housing inflation.
Canada has one of the highest housing price-to-income ratios in the
developed world, according to the OECD. One reason is stagnant
homebuilding, with the number of dwellings per 1,000 residents far below
the G7 standard. With homeownership rates declining, that has led to
increasing backlash toward immigrants and newcomers.
Canada has also struggled with excessive reliance on extractive
industries and heavy dependence on exports to the U.S. With current
tensions between Canada and the U.S., "reliance on both oil and exports
remains a major feature of the country's economy and has recently been
exposed as a geoeconomic vulnerability," according to the researchers.
However, the persistent challenges of regional representation and
limited state capacity "will make it increasingly challenging to enact
far-reaching plans for economic integration and greater political
sovereignty."
The report said that addressing these challenges will require
investments in state capacity, economic diversification — both
sectorally and geographically — and building greater democratic
legitimacy through regional inclusion.
Researchers recommend the next government "complete Trudeau's
unfinished goal of introducing a proportional representation system"
that includes greater geographic representation and inclusion of First
Nations peoples, which will be "critical for increasing legitimacy and
national unity."
Polls now project a Liberal majority in the House of Commons.
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